Were you, or you a fan of the Match Game? (The old Gene Rayburn version.)

Are Dumb Dora and Dumb Donald household names in your family?

Then this is the page for you!

So what the _________ is this Match Game page all about?

A couple of times a month folks who are addicted to the old game shows on GSN (The Game Show Network) and Buzzr and who actually watch the credits at the end, e-mail me. They ask if I'm any relation to the Dick DeBartolo whose name appears on the credits of the old Match Game shows. No, it's no relation, it's me. I wrote questions for The Match Game for about 18 years. Credits on the Match Game were only run once a week. So four out of every five Match Game shows do not have credits. But on the 5th day, it's there, along with the names of the additional writers who were out in Hollywood. (I wrote from Goodson-Todman east in NY when the show moved west.)

In case you didn't see the GSN Special "The Real Match Game Story: Behind the Blank", here's a bit of history. I was hired to write the Match Game back in early fall of 1961 about 3 months before the show went on the air. During pre-production the set was designed, the rules of the game were worked out and I started to create batches of Match Game questions. When Match Game first went on the air, New Year Eve, 1961, the questions were pretty 'quiet'. They were easy to answer things such as:

Name a red flower.

Name something you can make with a potato.

Name a President whose face appears on money.

Name something you can do with an egg.

Pretty exciting stuff, huh? Toward the end of the first year, Match Game was cancelled. Mark Goodson called me into his office and told me there were six weeks of shows left to do, but after they were recorded, production would stop. The option to carry Match Game over into a second year was not picked up by NBC.

After thinking about Match Game's demise over the weekend, I came back to Goodson-Todman Productions Monday morning and set up a meeting with head honco, Mark Goodson. I told him I worked for MAD Magazine and I had being thinking about bringing a 'MAD magazine approach' to the questions. I suggested we try some silly stuff. Mark asked to hear an example of one, and I read him this:

Mary like to pour gravy on John's______.

That was the first silly Match Game question I ever wrote. Goodson laughed and said: "It's funny, but what will people answer?" I told him they would most likely laugh like he did and then give acceptable answers like meatloaf, turkey, potatoes, etc. Goodson said: "Well the show's cancelled and has just six weeks to run. So do all the silly questions you want." Then he added: "The show's already cancelled, so NBC can't cancel it twice!"

Gene, Geraldo & Dick De at a Game Show Reunion Show.On the very next show we started mixing in the new off-beat questions with the regular ones. The audience liked the the silly questions a lot and the ratings started to pick up. Even before the six weeks of production was up Goodson called me in to say the ratings had improved and that the network had picked up Match Game for another season! Going silly and adding a bit of double entendre questions gave the show a new life. One that lasted about 20 years, with three different reincarnations. And who ever dreamed, that thanks to the Game Show Network, The Match Game would live on, even today.

If you search YouTube "Behind The Blank" is sometimes up there to view.

I don't know if the Game Show Network still shows old Match Game shows, but I know that the Buzzr Channel does. As a matter of fact, I watched Match Game today, 12/14/16 and they even ran the credits. I saw my name at the end of the show along with the other writers added when the Match Game went to Hollywood.

Of course I'd love doing the Match Game rehearsals! (That way Gene could rest between shows. We did the whole week in one day. Two shows, Monday and Tuesday, in the morning. Lunch break, then the Wednesday, Thursday & Friday shows.) We had stand-ins for the celebrities too. The idea was to run through the game for the benefit of the contestants. How to enter, where to place your cards after you wrote your answer, how to dispose of the used cards, etc. We used old Match Game questions for the rehearsals. That's me at Gene's Podium. And that's the old Match Game set. Back then in the NY version we had two teams, each with a celebrity captain and two contestants.

Lauren Bacall was a frequent guest on Match Game. She was great. We had so much fun in the green room joking around, one day when I called her Lauren, she said: "please, call me Betty, that's what my friends call me." Wow! What a thrill to hear that! On this early Match Game show video clip from the 60's, she tells Gene Rayburn that I'm her 'secret passion'. When I spy the camera is on me, I ham it up a bit. I spent like 40 years looking for this clip and found it minutes before her 90th birthday, 9/16/14. Lauren died about a month before, on 8/12/14. Please forgive the old video quality, but you'll get to see the original Match Game set in glorious black and white.

Back in late 60's Gene Rayburn was asked to host The Tonight Show for a week while Johnny Carson was away on vacation. Since Gene and I were working together on The Match Game and having a lot of fun, he asked me to come up with something silly we could do on The Tonight Show. I told Gene I did pretty good prat falls, why don't I go on the show as a spokesperson for "The National Safety Council" and trip while entering the set. Gene liked the idea, and we did it. I must say it went off very, very well. And this is the video. I have to thank Chelsea Thrasher for finding this clip. She works in TV and was helping a friend do some research on Gene Rayburn. When this clip surfaced she contacted me to ask if I wanted a copy. Boy, did I!!! I had a kinescope copy made back in the late 60's when Gene & I did this, but no one had been able to digitize it. So THANK YOU, Chelsea!

Do you get residuals from those endless reruns of theold Match Game shows?

Well the answer is technically "yes". I got residuals just once. When the shows first went over to the Game Show Network I got two checks. I remember hearing that some money would be forth coming. When the checks arrived I thought: "Wow, this is going to be like found money!" But it wasn't quite that way. One check was for $1.12. Yep, $1.12! I thought that might at least be a weekly event, but it turned out to be the ONLY check I ever got for Match Game re-runs!

I also worked on Family Feud, writing questions. Family Feud was really a spin-off from the "audience match" part of the Match Game. (Family Feud was another Mark Goodson-Bill Todman Production. I didn't work quite so many years on Family Feud so my check for reruns of that show was only $.28. Yes, twenty-eight cents!

As you can image, I never cashed them. They were worth more as something to show friends 'my windfall', so they remain uncashed more than 10 years later. Not like they could be cashed now anyway.

It was fun writing the Match Game all those years, but it would have been much more fun today if Ihad I gotten just a bit more from the re-runs, the DVD's, the video games, the foreign editions of Match Game and all the other Match Game stuff. Oh, well, what the ______!